jay_chen wrote:
I am using 2.6.14.5 and MPC8349.
I got some DMA problems with PCI devices.
So, I tried to understand the DMA stuff of linux.
That's very old; have you tried the latest kernel?
I have one question about cache coherency.
In dma-mapping.h, I found some functions are defined as NULL.
For example:
#define dma_cache_inv(_start,_size) do { } while (0)
#define dma_cache_wback(_start,_size) do { } while (0)
#define dma_cache_wback_inv(_start,_size) do { } while (0)
#define __dma_alloc_coherent(gfp, size, handle) NULL
#define __dma_free_coherent(size, addr) do { } while (0)
#define __dma_sync(addr, size, rw) do { } while (0)
#define __dma_sync_page(pg, off, sz, rw) do { } while (0)
Does this mean that I don't need to take care of cache coherency in
MPC83xx platform?
So, I could use any range of memory for DMA transferring and the
hardware will take care of the cache coherency for me?
Yes, however it's still a good idea to call the DMA functions in case
the code gets run on hardware that doesn't have coherent DMA, or that
needs special DMA mapping for highmem.
Make sure that the PCI bridge is configured to snoop, and that you map
your memory as coherence-required (normally not necessary on
uniprocessor, but there's some weirdness in the 82xx/83xx PCI controller
that requires it).
-Scott
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